The Other Side of the Mountain: The End of the Journey, Vol. 7 FROM THE PUBLISHER
The seventh and final volume of Thomas Merton's journals finds him exploring new territory, both spiritual and geographic, in the last great journey prior to his untimely death. Traveling in the United States and the Far East, Merton enjoys a new freedom that brings with it a rich mix of solitude, spirited friendship, and interaction with monks of other traditions. In his last days in the United States, Merton continues to follow the tumultuous events closing the 1960s, including the assassinations of Martin Luther King, Jr., and Robert Kennedy. Meanwhile, with the blessing of his new abbot, Merton travels to monasteries in New Mexico and among the redwoods of Northern California, keeping his journal all the while. When Merton wins approval to participate in a meeting of monastic superiors of the Far East in Bangkok, Thailand, his life enters its most thrilling period. Arriving in Calcutta, Merton is heartbroken by the poverty of the many beggars; in New Delhi and Dharamsala, he makes contact with local Buddhists, including the Dalai Lama. Recognizing each other as kindred spirits, Merton and the Dalai Lama speak from the heart like old friends.
FROM THE CRITICS
Kenneth Woodward
[Martin Luther]King and [Robert] Kennedy each left legacies. But Merton left us himself: 6,000 posthumously published pages....Merton's real autobiography is in his personal journals. They reveal an uncaged mind ceaselessly churned by contemporary events and cluture....To those of us who devoured his best-selling books on contemplative prayer, it seemed that Merton had all the important questions answered. But in the journals we find him turning old answers into new questions. Newsweek
Laurie Scott
Thomas Merton, philosopher, peace activist, Trappist monk, ended his days as he had always lived themas a seeker for enlightenment and the best of humanity. The Other Side of the Mountain is perhaps the most poignant volume in a seven-volume series of Merton journals....The last years of Merton's life were also among the most turbulent in American history, and it is fascinating to read his thoughts about Vietnam, American blood lust, and the civil rights struggle. But it is the account Merton's Asian pilgrimage that makes this last volume of the journals a fitting eulogy for the man who interpreted Eastern thought for the West, because he hoped it might awaken our better selves. Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Peter Coyote
The familiar Zen aphorism goes, 'A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.' Each step of Merton's quest feels deliberately placed, solid as a well-placed flagstone. The fact taht we do not know 'how it all turns out' highlights our own lives as unfinished spiritual journeys. The pages become transparent and we can see through them into our own inner landscapes. In such convoluted territory, we could ask for no better mentor and guide than Thomas Merton. San Francisco Sunday Examiner and Chronicle
Newsweek
Merton's real autobiography is in his personal journals. They reveal an uncaged mind ceaselessly churned by contemporary events and culture...In the journals we find him turning old answers into new questions.
John Rivera
But contrary to any notion that discourse on spirituality is simply bubble-headed blathering, there is much religious writing that is rational, literate and meets every standard of intellectual integrity....Some of the best of those books deal with the inner struggle, the frustrations and distractions that mark an authentic life of faith....One is the last of the seven volumes of the Merton journals The Other Side of the Mountain....Here are the musings of a holy man who is human, who embodies the notion that faith is a commitment that must be made and wrestled with constantly. The Baltimore Sun
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WHAT PEOPLE ARE SAYING
"[Martin Luther]King and [Robert] Kennedy each left legacies. But Merton left us himself: 6,000 posthumously published pages....Merton's real autobiography is in his personal journals. They reveal an uncaged mind ceaselessly churned by contemporary events and cluture....To those of us who devoured his best-selling books on contemplative prayer, it seemed that Merton had all the important questions answered. But in the journals we find him turning old answers into new questions."
HarperCollins
"Thomas Merton, philosopher, peace activist, Trappist monk, ended his days as he had always lived them--as a seeker for enlightenment and the best of humanity. The Other Side of the Mountain is perhaps the most poignant volume in a seven-volume series of Merton journals....The last years of Merton's life were also among the most turbulent in American history, and it is fascinating to read his thoughts about Vietnam, American blood lust, and the civil rights struggle. But it is the account Merton's Asian pilgrimage that makes this last volume of the journals a fitting eulogy for the man who interpreted Eastern thought for the West, because he hoped it might awaken our better selves."
HarperCollins
"The familiar Zen aphorism goes, 'A journey of a thousand miles begins with the first step.' Each step of Merton's quest feels deliberately placed, solid as a well-placed flagstone. The fact taht we do not know 'how it all turns out' highlights our own lives as unfinished spiritual journeys. The pages become transparent and we can see through them into our own inner landscapes. In such convoluted territory, we could ask for no better mentor and guide than Thomas Merton."
HarperCollins
"But contrary to any notion that discourse on spirituality is simply bubble-headed blathering, there is much religious writing that is rational, literate and meets every standard of intellectual integrity....Some of the best of those books deal with the inner struggle, the frustrations and distractions that mark an authentic life of faith....One is the last of the seven volumes of the Merton journals The Other Side of the Mountain....Here are the musings of a holy man who is human, who embodies the notion that faith is a commitment that must be made and wrestled with constantly."
HarperCollins
"The seventh volume of Merton's journals opens a last revealing window on the life of one of the most influential contemplatives of the twentieth century....Essential for all those interested in Merton, in the contemplative life, and in Buddhist-Christian dialogue."
HarperCollins
"Scholars and diehard Merton fans will welcome The Other Side of the Mountain as a necessary addition to the corpus of Merton's work. The rest of us will always be grateful to Thomas Merton for showing us the side with seven storys."
HarperCollins
"The last volume of the famous series of the journals of author, writer, monk and thinker Thomas Merton became available midsummer and is a pleasurable read....The last volume....reveals Merton once more as an original thinker with a remarkable mind....His journals offer his inner life's story and his outlook on subjects from private and public piety to pop culture."
HarperCollins